The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- On the origin (and fate) of plants that never bloom [260d]
- Report reveals key challenges facing adolescents [260d]
- A new complexity in protein chemistry: Algorithm uncovers overlooked chemical linkages [260d]
- Scientists discover one of the world's thinnest semiconductor junctions forming inside a quantum material [260d]
- Water researchers develop prediction system for harmful algae [260d]
- Research team homes in on genetics behind blackberry thorns [260d]
- Study reveals impact of sewage overflows on Chicago river ecosystem [260d]
- High-throughput microscopy analysis identifies flavonoids that are toxic to bladder cancer cells [260d]
- Accounting for marine ecosystems in China may offer greater environmental and economic sustainability [260d]
- Wolves in the Netherlands feed mainly on wild animals, but also target grazing cattle in areas with less prey [260d]
- Small-scale, big impact: New insights into marine biodiversity around the Cape Verde islands [260d]
- New research links global climate patterns to wildfires in Los Angeles [260d]
- Differentiate on social media and win: Why brands must have unique content strategies on platforms like X [260d]
- 100 corporations behind a fifth of global extractive conflicts, study reveals [260d]
- Updated economic geography model incorporates heterogeneity in firm productivity, environmental pollution [260d]
- New copepod species highlights fragile biodiversity in Bermuda's caves [260d]
- Young people don't feel able to talk about race and faith in school, says study [260d]
- Sex-specific climate responses in plants reveal flaws in biodiversity forecasts [260d]
- Q&A: Researchers discusses how tariffs reshape supply chains in unpredictable ways [260d]
- Few politicians ask critical questions about artificial intelligence [260d]
- AI and global partnerships seen as key to reducing food contamination risks [260d]
- Who responds to carbon footprint labels? The key role of political ideology [260d]
- Pressure and temperature record broken for sCO₂ materials testing [260d]
- Clouding the forecast: Why so many climate models are wrong about rate of Arctic warming [260d]
- Tattoos of rare shape and composition found on 800-year-old Andean mummy [260d]
- Bees facing new threats, putting our survival and theirs at risk [260d]
- Cobalt catalyst rivals platinum in key industrial reaction [260d]
- Image: Sunset at Mars's Gusev Crater in 2005 [260d]
- The sun up close: Observations with new VTT camera technology deliver 8K image resolution [260d]
- Barley grain production linked to peptide-receptor system controlling inflorescence architecture [260d]
- Plant protein needs adaptor to promote symbiosis with fungi: Research reveals the molecular mechanism [260d]
- Two newly discovered crayfish species are already at risk [260d]
- Hazy prospects for rainbow trout: Researchers uncover hidden dangers of water 'browning' [260d]
- Fish driving cars and chimps doing math: What teaching animals 'irrelevant' skills reveals about our own minds [260d]
- Heat wave forces early school closures in Pakistan's largest province [260d]
- The UK might have accepted the idea of youth mobility with the EU, but it's not happening any time soon [260d]
- How membranes may have brought about the chemistry of life on Earth [260d]
- For long-tailed tits, it really does take a village [260d]
- Do photons wear out? An astrophysicist explains light's ability to travel vast cosmic distances without losing energy [260d]
- Turn up the noise: Why distortion in music is growing in popularity [260d]
- Microplastics eaten by UK invertebrates are contaminating food chains [260d]
- How to tackle new strains of potato blight and avoid another great famine [260d]
- Why do protestors use disruptive, confrontational tactics? New research shows they're not just a last resort [260d]
- Nonprofit news media leaders struggle to stop leaning on the foundations that say they should branch out more [260d]
- The one-size-fits-all diversity training model is broken. Here's a better alternative [260d]
- Flowers have been blooming on Earth for 123 million years, pollen grains reveal [260d]
- Ancient pollen reveals stories about Earth's history, from dinosaurs to the Mayan collapse [260d]
- Coastal squeeze is bad for biodiversity and for us, says researcher [260d]
- Fluridone widens Palmer pigweed control options for rice growers, but researchers say stick to the label [260d]
- Household action can play major role in climate change fight [260d]
- Forests thrive where cultural values run deep, study finds [260d]
- Native turtles return to Yosemite after removal of invasive bullfrogs [260d]
- Researchers reveal risk to estuarine ecosystems threatened by climate change and development [260d]
- Butterflies show lead pollution is still a problem in the Twin Cities [260d]
- Even without feds, states can take meaningful action on climate change [260d]
- Magnetic beads method dramatically improves cryo-EM's imaging capabilities [260d]
- Jupiter was formerly twice its current size and had a much stronger magnetic field, study says [260d]
- Happy together: Peroxide binds incompatible polymers for recycling [260d]
- Stopping infections before they can start: Promising approach blocks bacteria from binding to cells [260d]
- Expert content juries preferred for social media moderation, survey finds [260d]
- Hubble captures distant galaxy's light bent into a partial Einstein ring [260d]
- The summer scaries: Survey reveals concerns about kids' mental health don't disappear when school lets out [260d]
- Cool science: Researchers craft tiny biological tools using frozen ethanol [261d]
- The mysterious Giant Woolly Rat: Largest rodent in Australia and Oceania documented for first time [261d]
- Overlooked electron property opens up new avenues for orbitronics [261d]
- How can people and wildlife better coexist? [261d]
- Overshooting 1.5°C: Even temporary warming above temperature limit could have permanent consequences [261d]
- Disaster authoritarianism: How autocratic regimes deal with earthquakes [261d]
- 'No pain, no gain': Why some primary students are following intense study routines [261d]
- AI may be exposing jobseekers to discrimination. Here's how we could better protect them [261d]
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